Saturday, July 5, 2014

Recipe of the Month: Salade niçoise

When the salade niçoise arrives at the table, many people will complain “That’s not what I ordered.”
Why is that?
Because everyone seems to have their own idea about what goes in it. Many times I’ve been asked, “You live in France. Someone said I can’t put ham/cucumber/chicken in my salade niçoise. The French do, don’t they?” Well, in Paris you can get a niçoise with a lot of things in it that you wouldn’t find if you ordered it in Provence. Even rice and carrots. Does that make it right? Do we really care?
Any salade niçoise will include tomatoes, ripe (black) olives, and some sort of greens. Most will include potatoes, green beans, hard-boiled eggs, tuna and anchovies. Some, to be very Mediterranean, will include artichoke hearts and some garlic. Several times I’ve seen it served with an American touch of fresh corn.
What you don’t want to do, under any circumstances, is put ranch dressing on a salade niçoise. That is the bottom line. In France you’ll only find vinaigrette dressing: vinegar, a dab of hot mustard, salt and pepper and then the oil. (Vinegar first so the oil will mix well.)
This being said, and without further introduction, here is what would pass for the “real” recipe for Salade Niçoise. The proportions will serve 6, but you can dress the plates individually rather than serve it in one large bowl, if you want. That way everyone gets all the ingredients.
And yes, Drew Barrymore, it comes with the “little fishies”. (Should you not understand that, go watch the opening scene of E.T. again.)

Market day in Provence

salad greens to line the bowl (usually Boston lettuce or red leaf lettuce)

1 lb fresh thin green beans, cold

2 or 3 medium-sized potatoes, cold, cooked and diced

3-6 medium-sized tomatoes, ripe but still very firm

3 hard-boiled eggs

1 c chunk tuna (about 6 oz), flaked

12 anchovy fillets

1 T capers

1 garlic clove, cut in half

pitted ripe olives

1 c vinaigrette dressing

chopped fresh herbs such as chervil and tarragon (1 T each)

salt & freshly ground pepper

optional: 6 scallions, minced

- Cut the tips off the green beans and peel the potatoes. Blanch the beans and cook the potatoes separately in salted boiling water until they are barely tender. Then pour off the water, cool under running water for a few minutes or in a bowl with ice water so that they don’t continue to cook. Drain well.
- Wash the lettuce, throwing away any wilted leaves, and spin or gently pat dry.
- Dice the potatoes and cut the green beans into pieces about 2" long.
- Wash the tomatoes and cut them into four or six pieces, depending on their size
- Rub the bowl with the garlic and line the bowl with the lettuce.
- Mix the potatoes and green beans together with the capers. Salt and pepper to taste. Then season with a little of the vinaigrette dressing, and arrange in the bowl.
- Decorate with the tuna, anchovy fillets, olives, and the egg and tomato wedges.
- Sprinkle the minced herbs (and optional scallions) over the top and serve immediately, with the remaining vinaigrette on the side.

Two tips:
- Remember: both capers and anchovies are salty, so you might want to go easy on the salt.
- Small, French-style black olives are best, but canned olives can be substituted if necessary. Large Greek-style olives are not recommended. A word to the wise: the French rarely pit their olives, so be forewarned! Otherwise your dentist may be a very happy puppy.

About Me

I lead a double life. Half of it in France, the other half in the States.
What do I do that allows me to split my life in two?
I create tours of France, mostly for Americans. Always very small groups so the tour can be custom-tailored to people’s likes and interests. Being American and yet having lived half my life in Paris, it’s easy for me to understand France and explain it to fellow Americans.
I write books: “Paris, in Quotes” - a photobook - and also children's books about Miles and Einstein, the cats who shared an apartment in Paris with me and my children.
And then there's the photography... and from time to time, exhibits.
It’s all on my website: www.sandyschopbach.com